Irene Mawer and
Ruby Ginner worked together to create what was to become the Ginner-Mawer School of Dance and Drama. The same female focus was present in productions such as those held in Hyde Park, revealing an interesting and under-researched phenomenon of women in creative roles in theatre during this period. In 1923, Mawer was one of the first people to be involved in the newly created Diploma in Dramatic Art, the first qualification of its type in the UK. The syllabus included mime, and Mawer taught this as part of her duties at the Central School of Speech and Drama which was newly affiliated to the
University of London. In 1927, a mime play written and produced by Mawer ('Priscilla or the Lost Columbine') formed part of the Dramatic Examination performance for this Diploma of Dramatic Art. At Ginner-Mawer mime was not seen as a stand-alone subject, it was seen as a foundation subject for all other forms of movement and speech. Actor, director and drama theorist,
Michel Saint-Denis participated in the activities of the Institute of Mime, including giving a Guest Lecture in 1936. In the years before
World War II Mawer was the leading figure in mime education in the UK and the first performer of mime and the first educationalist to publish a seminal history of mimetic movement from its primitive and religious origins. Members of the Institute of Mime gave lectures and/or demonstrations at a variety of locations, including the Froebel Society (now the
National Froebel Foundation; the Central Association for Mental Welfare (now
Mind (charity)); the Women's League of Health and Beauty;
HM Prison Holloway (a women's prison); and the
British Drama League. By the end of the 1940s Mawer's method of mime was well established and involved a very high degree of training to make movement effective. Mawer's method contributed to the rapid changes in body training during the first four decades of the twentieth century and the work of the Ginner-Mawer School can be said to form a link between
Isadora Duncan and
Rudolf Laban. and also in the Indian multi-arts centre
Triveni Kala Sangam founded by Ginner-Mawer Old Girl
Sundari K. Shridharani, while in the US, Christian mime ministry uses Mawer to show that mime can be of God, as well as secular. In England, alumni of the Institute of Mime included Rose Bruford who taught at both the
Royal Academy of Music (RAM) and the
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) and then opened her own school in 1950 - the Rose Bruford Training College of Speech and Drama, now the
Rose Bruford College of Theatre and Performance. Other alumni staff appointments included positions at the Central School of Speech and Drama (later known as the
Royal Central School of Speech and Drama); the Ben Greet Academy, the Webber-Douglas School of Acting (later known as the
Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art); the Incorporated London Academy of Music; the Headquarters of the Young Women's Christian Association (
YWCA), plus lecturers for the National Federation of
Women's Institutes (WI). Originally published in Mawer's book of poetry, 'The Dance of Words', in 1925, the poem was still being used in 2022 by pupils in North Carolina as part of on-line teaching resources. ==Personal life==